Human Made

PL10 1PG

About us

Music of the Mind

All Rosemary Johnson ever dreamt of was becoming a professional Violinist. In 1988, Rosemary was involved in a car accident. She suffered a devastating head injury, robbing her of speech and movement. Now, twenty-eight years on, she is learning to make music again, using only the power of her mind.

As fourth violin of the Welsh National Opera Orchestra at twenty-two, not only had she fulfilled her ambition, but many believe she was poised to become world class.

Then, in 1988, Rosemary was involved in a car accident. She suffered a devastating head injury, robbing her of speech and movement. Although Rosemary was forced to come to terms with the fact that her career as a musician was over, she never abandoned hope that one day she might once more play the violin.

Now, twenty-eight years on, she is learning to make music again, using only the power of her mind.

Thanks to an extraordinary ten-year project led by the Plymouth University and the Royal Hospital for Neuro-disability in London, Rosemary’s brain has been wired up to a computer using Brain Computer Music Interfacing software. With a combination of thought and retina control, she is able to select notes and phrases to be played and alter a composition as it is performed by live musicians. She wears an EEG cap furnished with electrodes which can read electrical impulses from her brain. These instructions are sent instantly to a member of the string quartet who views the musical phrases on a screen. Rosemary can focus her thoughts to affect the intensity, timbre and tempo of the piece.

There’s no doubt that the project has been emotionally rewarding for all those who have been involved. Professor Eduardo Miranda, the man at the forefront of the project, describes his experience: “The first time we tried with Rosemary we were in tears. We could feel the joy coming from her at being able to